39 research outputs found

    Influence of geometric and material nonlinearities on the behaviour and design of stainless steel frames

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    Material nonlinearity affects the stiffness and consequently the distribution of internal forces and moments in indeterminate structures. This has a direct impact on their behaviour and design, particularly in the case of stainless steel, where material nonlinearity initiates at relatively low stress levels. A method for accounting for the influence of material nonlinearity in stainless steel frames, including making due allowance for the resulting amplified second order effects, is presented herein. Proposals have been developed for austenitic, duplex and ferritic stainless steels. The method was derived based on benchmark results calculated through second order inelastic analysis with strain limits, defined by the Continuous Strength Method, using beam finite element models. A comprehensive set of frames was modelled and the proposed assessment of second order effects in the plastic regime was also verified against the results of four full-scale stainless steel frame tests. The proposed method is due to be included in the upcoming revision to Eurocode 3 Part 1.

    Effects of material nonlinearity on the global analysis and stability of stainless steel frames

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    In structural frames, second order effects refer to the internal forces and moments that arise as a result of deformations under load (i.e. geometrical nonlinearity). EN 1993-1-1 states that global second order effects may be neglected if the critical load factor of the frame αcr is greater than or equal to 10 for an elastic analysis, or greater than or equal to 15 when a plastic global analysis is used. No specific guidance is provided in EN 1993-1-4 for the design of stainless steel frames, for which the nonlinear stress-strain behaviour of the material will result in greater deformations as the material loses its stiffness. A study of the effects of material nonlinearity on the stability of stainless steel frames is presented herein. A series of different frame geometries and loading conditions are considered. Based on the findings, proposals for the treatment of the influence of material nonlinearity on the global analysis and design of stainless steel frames are presented

    Effects of material nonlinearity on the global analysis and stability of stainless steel frames

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    © 2017 Elsevier Ltd In structural frames, second order effects refer to the internal forces and moments that arise as a result of deformations under load (i.e. geometrical nonlinearity). EN 1993-1-1 states that global second order effects may be neglected if the critical load factor of the frame αcris greater than or equal to 10 for an elastic analysis, or greater than or equal to 15 when a plastic global analysis is used. No specific guidance is provided in EN 1993-1-4 for the design of stainless steel frames, for which the nonlinear stress-strain behaviour of the material will result in greater deformations as the material loses its stiffness. A study of the effects of material nonlinearity on the stability of stainless steel frames is presented herein. A series of different frame geometries and loading conditions are considered. Based on the findings, proposals for the treatment of the influence of material nonlinearity on the global analysis and design of stainless steel frames are presented

    The Continuous Strength Method for the design of stainless steel hollow section beam-columns

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    The Continuous Strength Method (CSM) is a deformation based design approach that provides accurate cross-section resistance predictions by making rational allowance for the interaction between cross-section elements, the partial spread of plasticity and the beneficial effects of strain hardening. The CSM can be used in conjunction with advanced analysis for the design of members and frames, but, for hand calculations, member-level stability checks are currently limited to stainless steel hollow section columns failing by flexural buckling. Extension to the design of stainless steel members subjected to combined compression and bending moment is presented in this paper. The analysis is based on numerical results and existing experimental data collected from the literature on stainless steel hollow section members, including members with stocky and slender cross-sections. Comparisons demonstrate that the adoption of the CSM design equations in conjunction with both current and revised interaction factors considerably improves the accuracy of beam-column capacity predictions for members with stocky cross-sections. The analysis on beam-columns with slender sections shows that similar resistance predictions are obtained using Eurocode 3 and the CSM. The reliability of the proposed approach is demonstrated through statistical analyses performed in accordance with EN1990

    Una intervención en escritura académica durante la cursada virtual de Histología y Embriología, Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias-Universidad de Buenos Aires.

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    En la asignatura Histología y Embriología de la carrera de Veterinaria de la Universidad de Buenos Aires se solicita a los alumnos cursantes resolver una serie de actividades escritas. Durante la cursada virtual del primer cuatrimestre de 2021 se implementaron cinco actividades de integración. El objetivo fue propiciar la integración de los contenidos de la materia y su adecuada expresión escrita. Las consignas propuestas solicitaban la producción de textos individuales y originales, con una elaboración adicional a la expuesta en las fuentes bibliográficas. Los docentes correctores realizaban una devolución formal de cada entrega, aplicando una rúbrica diseñada por los autores. Esta rúbrica permitía calificar en base a siete criterios: formato textual, registro, uso del lenguaje técnico de la materia, pertinencia y cobertura de los contenidos solicitados, relación y dominio de conceptos, aspectos formales y fuentes de investigación teórica. Cada criterio reunía varios parámetros analizables. La devolución constaba de comentarios puntuales sobre el texto y breves párrafos explicativos. Se analizaron los escritos de un grupo de estudiantes (n=23), entre un “momento inicial” de la intervención y un “momento final”. Mediante un instrumento adicional se evaluó la evolución para cada criterio (y parámetro) de la rúbrica.Se observó una evolución favorable en más del 40% de los estudiantes para los criterios: formato textual, registro (persona verbal), lenguaje (expresión), aspectos formales (sintaxis, puntuación) y bibliografía (calidad, formato). Entre el 30 y el 40% demostró evolución favorable en: registro (formal y tiempo verbal), lenguaje (precisión) y aspectos formales (conectores). Menos del 30% demostró evolución favorable en:pertinencia y cobertura, relación y dominio de conceptos y lenguaje técnico de la materia (léxico). Se concluye que la intervención tuvo un efecto favorable en la calidad de la escritura académica de los estudiantes

    The continuous strength method for the design of stainless steel hollow section columns

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    The Continuous Strength Method (CSM) provides accurate resistance predictions for both stocky and slender stainless steel cross-sections; in the case of the former, allowance is made for the beneficial effects of strain hardening, while for the latter, design is simplified by the avoidance of effective width calculations. Although the CSM strain limits can be used in conjunction with advanced analysis for the stability design of members, for hand calculations, the method is currently limited to the determination of cross-sectional resistance only, i.e. member buckling resistance is not covered. To address this limitation, extension of the CSM to the design of stainless steel tubular section columns is presented herein. The proposed approach is based on the traditional Ayrton-Perry formulation, but features enhanced CSM cross-section resistances and a generalized imperfection parameter that is a function of cross-section slenderness. The value of the imperfection parameter increases as the slenderness of the cross-section reduces to compensate for the detrimental effect of plasticity on member stability that is not directly captured in the elastic/first yield Ayrton-Perry approach. The accuracy of the proposed approach is assessed against numerical results generated in the current study and existing experimental results collected from the literature. The presented comparisons show that the CSM provides consistently more accurate member buckling resistance predictions than the current EN 1993-1-4 design rules for all stainless steel grades. The reliability of the proposed approach is demonstrated through statistical analyses performed in accordance with EN 1990. Finally, the paper presents a framework through which the proposed approach can be developed for other cross-section types and materials

    Influence of geometric and material nonlinearities on the behaviour and design of stainless steel frames

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    Material nonlinearity affects the stiffness and consequently the distribution of internal forces and moments in indeterminate structures. This has a direct impact on their behaviour and design, particularly in the case of stainless steel, where material nonlinearity initiates at relatively low stress levels. A method for accounting for the influence of material nonlinearity in stainless steel frames, including making due allowance for the resulting amplified second order effects, is presented herein. Proposals have been developed for austenitic, duplex and ferritic stainless steels. The method was derived based on benchmark results calculated through second order inelastic analysis with strain limits, defined by the Continuous Strength Method, using beam finite element models. A comprehensive set of frames was modelled and the proposed assessment of second order effects in the plastic regime was also verified against the results of four full-scale stainless steel frame tests. The proposed method is due to be included in the upcoming revision to Eurocode 3 Part 1.
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